Professor Karen Yeung
Professor of Law, King’s College London
Speaking on: Privacy, Fair Processing and Confidentiality in an Information Society.
After completing degrees in Law and Commerce at the University of Melbourne, Karen Yeung came to the UK in 1993 as a Rhodes Scholar. Despite the sandy beaches, fine food and plentiful sunshine, the allure of Australia was not sufficiently strong to draw her back to her home country. She has been a Professor of Law at Kings' College London since September 2006, following twelve years at Oxford University. Her research explores the ways in which the law, alongside many other policy instruments, is used to shape and constrain social behaviour. In so doing, she has been contributing to a growing body of scholarship on regulation and governance, which has evolved into a coherent academic discipline that draws together a number of related disciplines and sub-disciplines including law, sociology, politics, criminology, public administration, management and organisation studies, psychology, economics, and anthropology. Professor Yeung has acted as an adviser to several regulators in both the UK and Australia.
Since moving to the Centre for Technology, Ethics, Law and Society (‘TELOS’) at King’s College London, she has focused her attention on new and emerging technologies. Her current research explores how new technologies may be used as an instrument for regulating social activities and constraining human behaviour, and the broader socio-political and ethical implications of their use. Her recent books include Regulating Technologies, Hart Publishing (2008 forthcoming) co-edited with Roger Brownsword and An Introduction to Law and Regulation (2007) Cambridge University Press, co-authored with Bronwen Morgan. She teaches Regulation and Governance (graduate) and Public Law (undergraduate) and is a Barrister and Solicitor of the Supreme Court of Victoria.